Enter quantum physics. Classical physics can't figure that one out. Its not likely to happen, possibly even in a lifetime. Personally, I can't throw the math down, but one must always explore all possibilities. Like one person posted, it could b a edge stand on toss 1. And also 2,3,4,5,6,7,8 and so forth. What gets calculated at that point is the deviation of the likelihood. I think they use sigmas to explore that stuff. Like the higgs boson was thrown around with the term sigma 5 or whatever, when regular people wouldn't even know what that means. Even further, they gave the wrong number for what it represents from Some sources, but that's beside the point. The equation is definitely already out there and solvable. I'm lazy tho